A coupling element (3) and a waveguide structure (4) are deposited on a common substrate (2) of an optical component (1). The coupling element (3) serves for the optical coupling of the waveguide structures (4) to a further optical component. The coupling element (3) contains a reflecting, curved surface (31.1-31.8) for deflecting and for collimation of light which propagates between the waveguide structure 4 and the further optical component. The coupling element (3) creates a standard for interfaces between the optical component (1) and a further optical component. The manufacture of the coupling element (3) is simple and inexpensive, may be standardized and directed to large batch numbers.
|
1. A method for the manufacture of an optical component, the component containing a waveguide structure and at least one coupling element for the optical coupling of the waveguide structure to a further optical component, the coupling element containing a reflecting, curved surface for changing the propagation direction and the shape of the wavefronts of light, the waveguide structure and the coupling element attached on a common substrate, the method comprising:
preparing a substrate and coupling element,
depositing the coupling element onto the substrate,
measuring the position of the coupling element on the substrate after depositing the coupling element,
evaluating a suitable course of a waveguide structure with respect to the position of the optical coupling element based on the measured position and
manufacturing the waveguide structure on the substrate with the evaluated suitable course.
2. A method according to
3. A method according to
4. A method according to
5. A method according to
6. A method according to
7. A method according to
8. A method according to
9. A method according to
|
This application claims priority from Swiss patent application No. CH 00690/05, filed Apr. 18, 2005.
1. Technical Field
The invention lies in the field of optical couplers for optical waveguides and relates to an optical component, a method for manufacturing an optical component and a method for coupling light out of a waveguide structure or into a waveguide structure, according to the preambles of the independent patent claims. The optical components according to the invention may have extensions in the region of a few centimeters to a few meters. Such optical components are mainly required for optical data transmission, and are applied for example in telecommunication, medical technology, sensor technology, in the construction of vehicles and aircraft, in technology relating to industry, buildings and control. Particularly advantageous embodiments are circuit boards which comprise electrical as well as optical structures.
2. Description of the Related Art
Optical waveguides may be manufactured by way of coating a substrate and subsequent photo-lithographic structuring of the layer. Such a manufacturing method is known for example in DE-197′32′506 A1. Accordingly, a layer of fluid, light-sensitive material, for example a UV-curable polymer is deposited on the substrate. The layer is directly written by way of an incoherent light source, in order to form the waveguide structures. The light-sensitive material is selectively exposed and cured by way of the direct writing. The coating material which has not cured is removed after the exposure has been effected. Multimode waveguides and -structures with core widths of approx. 20 μm or more may be manufactured with these methods.
For practical applications the waveguides must be coupled to other components in a low-loss manner, for example a waveguide located on an optical backplane strip to a processor board. This is effected by way of interfaces which may be designed for example as plug elements and contain suitable optical components such as coupling-in or coupling-out mirrors on the waveguide side.
A method for manufacturing waveguides with optical components is known for example from EP-0′911′658 A1. The optical components are attached on a substrate at predefined coupling-out locations, and are embedded in a waveguide layer. The waveguide structure is manufactured by way of direct writing with an incoherent light source after the deposition of the optical components on the substrate Thereafter, the coating material which is has not cured is again removed.
The exact mutual positioning of the waveguide and optical components plays a very significant role for a low-loss coupling-in and coupling-out. Even a shift by a fraction of the core width leads to a considerable reduction of the coupling efficiency, and thus to light losses. Losses of light however must be avoided in optical circuits, since they always reduce the signal-to-noise ratio at the exit. For this reason, many waveguides manufactured according to the method described in EP-0′911′658 A1 become unusable, even if one attempts to carry out the placing of the optical components and the direct writing of the waveguide structure as accurately and as reproducibly as possible. The method thus results in a high rejection rate.
Method for manufacturing optical components are known from the documents WO-000/60392 and U.S. Pat. No. 5,562,838 with which firstly optical components are deposited onto a substrate. Thereafter, positions and alignments of the optical components are measured. Strip waveguides are manufactured on the substrate in dependency on the determined positions and alignments, so that they are exactly aligned with respect to the optical components.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,832,150 discloses a coupler for glass fibers. For its manufacture, ends of a multitude of glass fibers to be coupled are fixed in a housing. The fiber ends together with an end piece of the housing are ground and polished in a manner such that an elongate, flat coupling facing and a cylindrically curved reflecting surface arises at each fiber end. The curved surface defines a line focus which lies somewhat above the coupling facing. A laser diode array may for example be introduced into the line focus. The light beam with an elliptical cross section which is emitted by a laser diode is coupled via the coupling facing into a corresponding glass fiber and is deflected as well as collimated by the cylindrical, reflecting surface, so that it propagates approximately parallel to the fiber axis in the fiber. One disadvantage of this coupler is its complicated manufacture. Furthermore, such a coupler may only be used for optical fibers which are free, but not for waveguide structures which are deposited on a substrate.
Other embodiments of such couplers also exist, but these are mostly individual solutions for certain applications. They are accordingly technically complicated and expensive in manufacture and procurement.
Objects ans Advantages
It is therefore an object of the present invention to create an optical component with an optical coupling element, wherein the optical component with the optical coupling element may preferably be able to be manufactured in a simple and inexpensive manner and with a mass production, and be suitable for many different applications.
It is furthermore the object of the invention to specify a method for the manufacture of optical components, which permits an exact, mutual positioning of the waveguide and of the coupling element. The coupling efficiency is to be optimized by way of this and the light damping in the component is to be reduced to a minimum. One strives for a production which produces as little as possible rejects.
A further object of the invention is to specify methods for coupling light out of a waveguide structure or into a waveguide structure, which may also be carried out with waveguide structures which are deposited on a substrate.
These and other objects will be apparent to those skilled in this art from the following detailed description of a preferred embodiment of the invention. These and other objects are achieved by the coupling element, the optical component, the manufacturing method and the coupling-in and coupling-out method, as defined in the independent patent claims. Advantageous embodiments are specified in the dependent patent claims.
In contrast to U.S. Pat. No. 5,832,159, according to the invention, the coupling-in and coupling-out is spatially distinctly separated from the light deflection and light collimation. Observed with regard to time, the procedure of the coupling-out and coupling-in and the procedure of the light deflection and light collimation are exchanged with one another with respect to U.S. Pat. No. 5,832,150. By way of this, one succeeds in the coupling element being able to be manufactured without the waveguide structure to be coupled. The manufacture thus becomes simpler and less expensive. It may be standardized and directed to large batch numbers. The coupling element according to the invention may be used on a substrate with wave-guiding structures, for example strip waveguides (microstrips).
The optical component according to the invention contains a waveguide structure and a coupling element for the optical coupling of the waveguide structure to a further optical component. The waveguide structure and the coupling element are attached on a common substrate. The coupling element contains a reflecting, curved surface for the simultaneous change of the propagation direction and of the shape of the wave fronts of light which propagates between the waveguide structure and the optical components.
In the method for manufacturing the optical component according to the invention, a substrate and a coupling element according to the invention are prepared. The coupling element is deposited onto the substrate. After the deposition of the coupling element, the position of the optical element on the substrate is measured. A suitable course of a waveguide structure with respect to the position of the coupling element is determined on account the measurement. The waveguide structure is manufactured on the substrate with the determined suitable course.
In the method according to the invention, for coupling light out of a waveguide structure, the light is coupled out of the waveguide structure, is subsequently incident onto the reflecting, curved surface, and its propagation direction and the shape of its wave fronts are simultaneously changed by the curved, reflecting surface.
In the method according to the invention for coupling light into a waveguide structure, the light is incident onto the reflecting curved surface, its propagation direction and the shape of its wave fronts are simultaneously changed by the curved, reflecting surface, and the light is subsequently coupled into the waveguide structure
The change of the propagation direction means a deflection of the light by way of the reflecting, curved surface preferably by approx. 90°. The change of the shape of the wavefronts may include a collimation, a focusing, the production of a divergent light beam or other influences. The invention is hereinafter explained mainly with the example of collimation without limiting its generality.
One preferred application of the invention is with components which combine electrical and optical functions with one another. For this purpose, the used substrate may be an electrical circuit board. The optical components and waveguide structures give the electrical circuit board an considerable increased value.
Concluding, one may say that the invention provides an optical interface which is characterized essentially by the following parameters:
These parameters must be known if another optical component is to be coupled onto the optical component according to the invention. The manufacturer or supplier of the other optical component does not need to concern himself with other parameters. Thus the invention creates a standard for such interfaces between two optical components and solves many problems which have existed until now. Such a standard may be of interest to a manufacturer or supplier of detectors, emitters, transmitters and/or plugs.
The term “light” in this document is to be understood as an type of electromagnetic radiation, in particular also visible light, infrared irradiation (IR) or ultraviolet irradiation (UV).
Preferred embodiments of the invention are hereinafter explained in a detailed manner by way of the drawings. Thereby, there are schematically shown in:
The basic shape of the coupling element 3 may for example be a truncated pyramid with a rectangular base surface 32, wherein the base surface 32 may measure approx. 6 mm×3 mm and the height may amount to approx. 0.5 mm. In the embodiment example of
The coupling element 3 contains at least one reflecting, curved surface 31.1-31.8. In order to be able to process several light channels with a single coupling element 3 (cf.
The optical component 1 contains at least one coupling element 3.1-3.5 according to the invention. It is five of them in the embodiment example of
The optical component 1 furthermore contains at least one waveguide structure 4.1, 4.2, . . . . Eight strip waveguides 4.1, 4.2, . . . parallel to one another are present per coupling element 3.1-3.5 in the embodiment example of
One coupling location, i.e. one end of a strip waveguide 4 and a part of a coupling element 3 is represented in
One exemplary beam path in the coupling location of
The beam path discussed above may of course also be the other way round with regard to time, so that incident light limited in an approximately parallel manner is coupled into the waveguide 4 by way of the reflecting, curved surface 31.
Important steps of the method according to the invention for the manufacture of an optical component are specified in the flow diagram of
As already mentioned, the substrate 2 is firstly prepared as is indicated in
In a second step, according to
The coupling element 3 may be deposited onto the substrate 2 automatically, for example by a robot (not shown)—a so-called pick-and-place unit—or manually, with or without the aid of suitable tools. In the usual case, the locations at which the coupling elements 3 are to be deposited are designated by a suitable plan. They are conveyed to the robot in electronic form or are displayed on the substrate 2 by way of markings. Mechanical positioning aids are possible, such as in the shape of grooves and projections corresponding to one another. Thanks to the method according to the invention, the positioning is not critical, i.e. may be effected in a relatively inaccurate manner. The coupling element 3 is preferably fastened on the substrate 2, for example by way of a bonding- or soldering process. The fastening should be as true to position as possible.
The whole substrate surface 21 or at least a part thereof is subsequently preferably coated with an underlay layer or lower peripheral layer 41, as
In any case, the measurement step must be effected after the deposition of the coupling element (
The aim of the measurement is an as accurate as possible evaluation of the position of the coupling element 3 with respect to the substrate 2 or to a fictive coordinate system which may also be allocated to the substrate. The term “position” thereby is to be understood as at least one position coordinate. In most cases however it will be necessary to measure more than one position coordinate. If it is assumed that the substrate surface 21 is a plane, the coupling element 3 may move on this plane 21 in a sliding manner and the exact shape of the coupling element 3 is known, then three degrees of freedom—are sufficient—the two Cartesian coordinates of a well defined point of the coupling element 3 in the substrate plane 21, and an angle with respect to a coordinate axis—, in order to unambiguously determine the position of the coupling element 3. If required, then one may very well measure more than only three degrees of freedom—for example in each case two Cartesian coordinates of two predefined points on the coupling element 3. As is known, the position of a body in space is unambiguously determined by six degrees of freedom. A measurement however of also more than six degrees of freedom may be useful in order by way of the thus obtained redundancy, to achieve a greater accuracy and reliability of the position measurement.
The pictures which are recorded by the camera 5 or the cameras are evaluated in order to determine the position of the coupling element 3. The evaluation may be effected manually or preferably automatically, for example by way of a digital processor (not shown). It would use method of triangulation for example. For simplifying the measurement, one may attach suitable alignment markings 36.1-36.4 on the coupling element (cf.
On account of the measurement then, with respect to the position of the at lest one coupling element 3, a suitable course of the waveguide structure to be realized is determined. “Suitable” for example means that one end of a waveguide 4 allocated to a reflecting, curved surface of the coupling element 3 (cf.
The actual waveguide layer, the core layer 42, is deposited onto the underlay layer 41 as shown in
The desired waveguide structure is then realized with the determined, suitable course. This may be effected for example by way of targeted partial curing and subsequent revertive development. The partial curing may be effected by way of direct writing (laser direct imaging, LDI) with a suitable light source 6, for example a UV-semiconductor laser, in the core layer 42, as is indicated in
After the direct writing, the coating material which is not cured is removed or revertively developed. This may be effected for example by way of washing away with a suitable solvent, acetone for example, or with an acetone replacement product. The desired waveguide structures with the determined suitable course remains after this, as is shown in
In a last step, a cover layer or upper casing layer 43 is deposited onto the structured core layer 42, and is cured if this is required. This is represented in
It is to be pointed out here, that the structuring of the waveguide structure 4 does not necessarily need to be effected on the core layer 42. Thus one may structure the cover layer 43 instead of the core layer 42. It is also conceivable to accordingly structure the underlay layer 41 and to leave the core layer 42 completely unstructured. The light would only be led to where an underlay layer 41 is present on account of light absorption in the substrate 2. Also several layers 41-43 of the waveguide structure 4 may be structured.
It is furthermore to be noted that the coupling element does not have to be deposited directly onto the substrate 2, but may for example be deposited onto the underlay layer 41.
Although the detailed descriptions above contain many specifics, these should not be construed as limiting the scope of the invention, but as merely providing illustrations of some of the presently preferred embodiments of this invention. Various other embodiments and ramifications are possible within its scope, a number of which are discussed in general terms above.
While the invention has been described with a certain degree of particularity, it should be recognized that elements thereof may be altered by persons skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, the present invention is not intended to be limited to the specific forms set forth herein, but on the contrary, it is intended to cover such alternatives, modifications and equivalents as can be reasonably included within the scope of the invention. The invention is limited only by the claims and their equivalents.
LIST OF REFERENCE NUMERALS
1
optical component
2
substrate
21
plane substrate surface
3
coupling element
31
reflecting, curved surface
32
base surface
33
peripheral surface
34
upper side
35
through holes
36
alignment markings
4
waveguide structure
41
underlay layer
42
core layer
43
cover layer
5
measurement camera
6
light source
61
light for curing
62
optical focusing system
7
collimation unit
71
adapter unit
80
guided light
81
coupled-out light
82
deflected, collimated light
101
preparation of the substrate
102
deposition of the coupling element onto the substrate
103
measurement of the position of the waveguide structure
104
evaluation of a suitable course of the waveguide structure
105
manufacture of a waveguide structure
Dietrich, Klaus, Paredes, Stephan, Michler, Markus, Halter, Markus, Walser, Andreas
Patent | Priority | Assignee | Title |
Patent | Priority | Assignee | Title |
4274706, | Aug 30 1979 | Hughes Electronics Corporation | Wavelength multiplexer/demultiplexer for optical circuits |
6934429, | Nov 01 2001 | NEC Corporation | Optical waveguide board and optical module |
Executed on | Assignor | Assignee | Conveyance | Frame | Reel | Doc |
Date | Maintenance Fee Events |
May 01 2008 | ASPN: Payor Number Assigned. |
Aug 30 2011 | M2551: Payment of Maintenance Fee, 4th Yr, Small Entity. |
Aug 25 2015 | M2552: Payment of Maintenance Fee, 8th Yr, Small Entity. |
Aug 26 2019 | M2553: Payment of Maintenance Fee, 12th Yr, Small Entity. |
Date | Maintenance Schedule |
Mar 25 2011 | 4 years fee payment window open |
Sep 25 2011 | 6 months grace period start (w surcharge) |
Mar 25 2012 | patent expiry (for year 4) |
Mar 25 2014 | 2 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 4) |
Mar 25 2015 | 8 years fee payment window open |
Sep 25 2015 | 6 months grace period start (w surcharge) |
Mar 25 2016 | patent expiry (for year 8) |
Mar 25 2018 | 2 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 8) |
Mar 25 2019 | 12 years fee payment window open |
Sep 25 2019 | 6 months grace period start (w surcharge) |
Mar 25 2020 | patent expiry (for year 12) |
Mar 25 2022 | 2 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 12) |